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SN 



PR 6025 
.P222 
S7 

1 1918 
Copy 1 



THE SONG OF THE PRAIRIE LAND 



AND OTHER POEMS 



BY 
WILSON MacDONALD 



Copyright 1918 by WILSON MacDONALD 



^■01/22/9/6 S)ci.A5()s^ 



244 



/nt) I 



^ J THE SONG OF THE PRAIRIE LAND 

,\A''- ^ They tell of the level sea 

. ' \" And the wind rebukes their word. 

^ V. I sing of the long and lev^el plain 

Which never a storm hath stirred. 
I sing of the patient plain 

That drank of the sun and rain 
A thousand years, by the burning spheres, 
To nourish this wisp of grain. 

I sing of the honest plain 

Where nothing doth lie concealed; 
Where never a branch doth raise her arm; 

Or never a leaf her shield 
Where never a lordly pine 

Breaks in on the endless line; 
Or the silver flakes of a poplar takes 

The strength from the sun's white wine. 

The child of the daneiag leaf, 

Whose laughter sweetens the earth, 
Doth never lure, on the barren moor, 

The soul, with her winsome mirth. 
And the wistful sound I hear 

Sweep over the spaces drear 
Is the human dole of a childless soul 

That mourns in a yearning year. 

Let the guilty man depart: 

For no cover here shall hide 
His conscious brow from the lights that plough 

Through the midnight's mystic tide. 
For the plain no mantle hath 

To lessen the strong sun's wrath 
And the tranquil eye of the searching sky 

Is ever upon your path. 

I'll walk with the winds tonight; 

And under the burnished moon 
Shall the white night wake a silver lake 

Where the rolling grasses croon! 
Shall waken a silken crest 

That sings to the night-bird's breast 
As the blue waves swing to the sea-gull's wing 

When the gallant wind blows west. 

Ah ! easy to hide from truth 

In the city 's haunted hole. 
But you cannot hide, on the prairies wide. 

Where the winds uncloak the soul. 
Where the dawn hath pure delight ; 

And the stars are clean ^nd white; 
And sweet and clean is the floor of green 

That washes the feet of Night. 

Who dwells with me on the Plain 

Shall never see spire or bell. 
But he too shall miss the traitor's kiss 

And the force that drags to Hell. 
And what if the coyottes howl 

When the black night draws her cowl! 
They have gentler glands than the human bandf 

That under the arc lamps prowl. 

And ours is a ereedless land. 

Far-flung from a script's commands. 
But we sometimes think at the cold-night's brink, 

Of the wounded Master 's hands. 
Yea, often at eventide, 

Our souls through the gloom have cried 
For a Guiding Light through the awful night 

That sleeps at the hermit's side. 



■r 



I opened my cabin door; 

And the starry hosts were gone. 
And I knew that God hath gathered their sparks 

To kindle the flame of dawn: 
To kindle a new, white sun 

That over the sward should run, 
And drink new hope, on the greening slope 

From the dew-cups one by one. 

Ah! here is the soul's, true sphere: 

And here is the mind's true girth. 
If I could bring, on the swallow's wing, 

The sorrowful hosts of earth 
To sit in this vacant room. 

And spin on the wind's fair loom, 
What golden bands would their spectral hands 

Weave over the wraith of Doom. 

For there is a wraith of Doom 

That wanders the crowded street. 
A heart of caie in his pleasant lair. 

And a soul his judgment seat. 
He comes in a robe of gray, 

And stands in the sunbeam's way 
And a blaze of rings, from an hundred kings. 

He wears on his hands today. 

I loosed me a steed last night, 

And plunged in the doleful dusk. 
And under the sky 1 heard no cry 

Save that of the widowed husk; 
Or a wolf wail, long and low. 

That came with a blare of snow; 
And I rode all night, with a mad delight, 

'Till I met the dawn, aglow. 

' ' Strange fool ! ' ' cry the men of gold, 

"For what could thy wild ride win? 
Why woo the woe of the winds that blow 

When the fire burns bright within?" 
And I said to the men of gold: 

' ' My heart could a tale unfold 
Of the truths we learn when the wild winds yearn, 

And the kiss of night grows cold. ' ' 

So, press on the spurs with me, 

And drink of a freeman's joys. 
In the endless land, where the gophers stand 

With a military poise. 
And no more will life seem sweet 

On the yellow, flaming street — 
A painted shrew, with a changeless hue, 

And a heart that loves deceit. 

And this is the Prairie Song 

As it came from out my heart 
And the winds that moan are its undertone; 

And the sullen sky its art. 
And only the craven man. 

With his rhyming finger span, 
Shall sulk and whine at my stinging line 

Or rail at its planless plan. 

But there is a king whose soul 

Hath grown to the Prairie's girth; 
Whose heart delights in the Northern Lights, 

On the borderlands of earth. 
And when suliset pours her wine 

At the weary day's decline 
I shall see him stand in the "Unknown Land" 

And his lips shall wear my line. 

Winnipeg, Feb. 10th, 1913. 



■ l" - - ■•' - '• ■■ ''- ■" 



PEACE 

Flow, flag, in the soft wind; blow, bugle, blow; 

The day we dreamed of thru the years is here. 

Lowered is Mars' red spear; 

And the shot-peopled air, 

Tired of the wild trumpet's blare. 

Tired of the upturned, glassy ej'es of men, 

Is quiet again. , 

Discord has fled with her gigantic peals, 

And, at her heels. 

Walks the old silence of the long ago. 

Flow, flag, in the soft wind; blow, bugles, blow. 



The upturned faces of the world today 

Are like the laughing waves of a sea in May. 

Tears are a lost art of a hateful dream; 

Laughter is King, is King. 

Blow, bugles, blow; let the wild sirens scream, 

Let the mad music ring. 

Until the very flowers shall nod and sing. 

I hear the lusty cheers of youth whose years 

Were blown to the crag's black edge; 

I see the Hours quaff up a mother's tears 

As the sun drinks dew upon a Devon hedge. 

No more shall the sad wires transmit the dole 

That gnaws into the soul. 

And that vast company we call the dead 

Shall know the flag of Peace flies overhead 

Because of the new lightness of our tread. 



In Flanders now the birds And their first wonder 

Since that loud August thunder 

That shattered the blue skies like broken glass. 

The wonder now is that the thing is dead 

That passed, with crimson tread, 

Over the silken floor of fragrant grass — 

The screaming, blatant woe 

That turned his plowshare in the flowers and sowed. 

By the quiet dreaming road, 

His crop of gleaming crosses, row on row. 

Flow, flag, in the soft wind; blow, bugles, blow. 



Like as a river dries up in the light 

Our tears have blown to vapor. 

The airplanes drop down in their droning flight 

Like floating paper. 

The gun that camouflaged her brutal throat 

In Bourbon's thicket 

Shall dream tonight in wonder at the note 

Of some lone cricket. 

And, where a maddened cuirassier grew gory 

In that wild, sudden clash of yesterday, 

Some docile, blue-eyed youth will sing a story 

And laughing, dancing children's feet will play. 



The world is blown with color like a flower 

In this triumphant hour. 

The great procession grows, their shining feet 

Sandalled with dewy peace. 

I watch them passing up the city street; 

Gaining on life a new and wondrous lease. 

Old men who pick up life like a broken rose 

Which they had thrown away; 

Old women who unbind their temple snows 

And comb them up for a new holiday; 

Young maidens, all their spirits like the flow 

Of the new melted snow; 

Flow, flag, in the soft wind; blow, bugles, blow. 



■aaaw aMHMMIMIW««W«MMWMiM«MMMMiMWi^W"fc»«ii 



This that we hear is but a shining drop 

In the glad sea of mirth. 

The tide flows round the world and will not stop 

Until it brims the earth. 

The Beduoin Arab now invites his dance 

Where the sandstorms croon; 

And a mad company in lilting France 

Unwind a rigadoon. 

Down a soft English lane 

Wild, happy, blue-eyed children chase the rain. 

They wrap their throats in song from Maine to where 

The Golden Gate unwinds her mist of hair. 

One grief alone we have: blow, bugle, blow; 

The crosses stand in Flanders, row on row. 

They shall not watch with us today nor fare 

On our bright bugle's blare. 

Flow, flag, in the soft wind; blow, bugles, blow; 
And then tonight, when all the lights are dim. 
Let us pour out our thanks in praise to Him 
Who gave the peace we know. 

Toronto, November, 1918. 

SONG OF THE SNOWSHOE TRAMP 

When you're tired of the dance hall's hurry, 

When you're cloyed with vaudeville jokes, 
When you're heartily sick of bloodless girls, 

Looking languid in opera cloaks; 
Come out with me to the open plain. 

Through Nature's wide flung door. 
And I'll cram more pleasure within your bruin, 

Than ever was there before. 
There 's a snowshoe tramp, with a moon for lamp, 

And there's music in the pine; 
And there's something now, in a balsam bough, 

That touches the heart like wine. 

I'll give you a girl with foot as light 

As the brown leaf on the snow; 
As the leaf that whirls with a mad delight 

Whenever the winds do blow. 
I'll give you a girl whom men call fair, 

And God calls fairer still 
And it's hip and ho for the rolling snow 

And the wood beyond the hill. 

Ah! even now to my window floats 

The soul of the cloistered spruce. 
So fling in a corner the silk-lined coat, 

And the prisoned feet let loose. 
Put on this cap, and this blanket wrap 

And button about your breast; 
And tie this sash where its silken flash 

May flame to the east and west. 

We carried the shoes to the marge of the town. 

To the edge of a still white moor; 
And we hummed a tune to the silver moon, 

As we made the thongs secure. 
And we blazed a trail, over field and rail; 

In a white and fenceless land. 
And we slid each hill, with a craftsman's skill. 

And laughed at the sons of weaker will 
Who pled for a friendly hand. 

Then a lengthened chain spread over the plain, 

As each couple drew apart; 
For a lad had something to tell a lass 

That long had troubled his heart; 
And a field of white, on a silver night, 

Lends words a witching art. 



Musi 



Over a cold bleak field, we drove 

Our faltering snowshoes fast, 
Until we came to a singing grove, 

Like a blanket before the blast. 
And here the fir, did lazily stir: 

And the dead leaf, in its woe, 
Pled from the tree that the wind might free 

Its hand and let it go — 
Pled with the wind to let it find 

A brother beneath the snow. 
And I could not help comparing, then. 

That leaf's one piteous song 
To the cry of women, the cry of men, 

Who linger in life too long. 
Oh! a snowshoetramp, with a moon for lamp, 

Brings thoughts like these in throng. 

We trailed a path that pierced the wood 

Like a fallen wisp of thread. 
And under a great pine bough we stood, 

'Till it poured a blessing from overhead. 
There's the heart of a bird, I've often heard. 

Imprisoned within the pine; 
For slowly it lifts long arms and sings 

Long ebon arms like the raven's wings — 
But the grasping root too tightly clings; 

And the earth cries "Thou art mine." 

Who lists to the pine's half -whispered lines 

In speech will gentler grow. 
And he will soon less harshly tread 

Who hears furred feet on snow. 
And he who looks across long plainSj 

While winter winds do blow, 
A keener, broader vision gains. 

Than he who looks through window panes, 
And haunts four walls, I know. 

O thoughts like these ride on the breeze. 
And pierce at will the mind. 

On a snowshoe tramp, with a moon for lamp, 
And music in the wind. 

There are stories writ on the cold white snow, 

Where velvet feet have pressed. 
More tersely told than the pen's long flow; 

More eloquently expressed. 
So, when ahead a rabbit sped, 

And a fox's dainty mark 
Told forage tales on the field's white spread 

And a feast when skies were dark, 
We had better fun than the timid one 

Who chose of an indoor ease, 
And breathed of a modern's sickly tales. 

Instead of the balsam breeze. 

A field of white is a cheerless sight 

With never a touch of red; 
So we massed our line on a wooded height 

And sank in her pleasant bed. 
And we lifted the tongue of a tiny flame 

And it whispered to branches dry. 
And all in a moment the answer came 

In a voice that pierced the sky. 

Yea, all in a moment the answer came; 

And we circled the yellow fire. 
And we hurled on twigs, with unerring aim. 

While the long red tongue grew higher. 
Then we sang a rugged Northern tune, 

With action in every note — 
No southern song with its dreamy rune, 

But an air that swelled the throat; 
Yes, an air our sires had handed down 

Like an heirloom of the mind. 
And we blessed the shoes that had left the town 

So many leagues behind. 



O! many a pair who tramped that night 

Took a longer trip together. 
And many a pair who braved that cold, 

Walked side by side to life's sunset gold, 
And braved life's stormy weather: 

For a snowshoe tramp, with a moon for lamp, 
Doth tie full many a tether. 

I have walked since then the floors of a king. 

But they were marble to that white floor. 
I have listened to hosts of a chorus sing, 

But those pines held music that I loved more. 
I have seen the flash of a thousand arcs, 

And the city's cruel white glare, 
But that anvil moon, with her countless sparks 

Was infinitely more fair — 
The moon, which on that winter's night, 

Looked down through the guiltless air. 

When you're tired of the dance hall's hurry, 

When you're cloyed with vaudeville jokes; 
When you're heartily sick of bloodless girls 

Looking languid in opera cloaks; 
Come out with me, where the heart beats free, 

And scorning conventional pride, 
Try a snowshoe tramp, with a moon for lamp. 

And a sweet girl at your side. 

Montreal. 1908. 



THE WHIP-POOR-WILL 

By Wilson MacDonald. 

Sad Minstrel of the Night's neglected hour; 

Strange, unseen, devotee of Loneliness; 
In sweet seclusion of some leafy tower 

Pleading a witching note of haunted stress. 
While other tribes confess 

Their secrets at the listing ear of day, 
Till night thou waitest thy confessional. 

But Mercy died with one last golden ray, 
And song of twilight bell. 

Mercy is dead — yea, fled is that warm sun; 

And when thou dost confess, none shall reply. 
Thine oft repeated prayer can never run 

Down the lost steps of light, to lure that eye 
Back to the gloomy sky. 

So shalt thou call, and call once more, in vain, 
foolish Virg^ of the feathered throng; 

Too late to trim thy lamp on sunlit plain. 
Or light a happy song. 

Limned on a leaden sky, the huddled trees 

Stand like the evil dregs in some black drink; 
When Erebus invades with chilling breeze. 

And stirs this blackness to the cup's high brink 
Where night doth interlink 

The solitary children Chaos bore. 
And on a hill, in pensive mood, I stand, 

Listing thy song waves plash a velvet shore 
Enchanting all the land. 

Thou hast one simple song alone to sing — 

For never was the varied note thy part; 
Never the trill the mocking bird doth fling 

Like spray of fountain on the weary heart; 
Yet would I count thine Art, 

Though flowing through a story oft retold. 
Not less than that which rides pretentious song. 

For Truth doth ever to one message hold; 
While Error chants a throng. 



gg*» 



The droning singers of the drowsy eve 

O'er their low waves of song hear thy notes swell, 
As o'er the murmur of the waters, grieve 

The weary wailings of the mournful bell: 
Nor they, nor I, can tell 

Which silent copse shall next thy message woo; 
More than, when gazing on the skies afar, 

Can we tell where, upon the fading blue, 
Shall gleam the next cold star. 



Oft hath Salene, in the vale of sleep, 

Fondling her fair Endymion, as he lay 
Pillowed where tearful grasses nightly weep, 

Pled with Tacita through thy bowers to stray. 
And warn thee lest thy lay 

Should rouse her lover from his dreamful bourne. 
And angry, often hath she, knowing thou 

Dost Phoebus fear, to trick thee it was morn, 
Burnished her chariot 's prow; 



When Eurus drives the first reluctant light, 

With all Apollo's pageantry behind — 
A dew imbibing cortege — and the Night 

Staggers to some black recess, stricken blind, 
Full various are the kind 

That tune a medley for the exiled king. 
And so, doth man not woo his minstrelsy 

At flush of power; doth every bard not sing- 
When Pomp and might pass by? 



Greater, I deem, it that attempt to thrill 

The hour of gloom with delequescent call, 
Wondrous is it to me, O Whip-poor-will, 

That thy most wistful note should brave the pall 
Of this Cerberian Hall. 

Spirit hast thou of that flower oped at night, 
That coral tinting on Atlanta's bed; 

Soul of thy soul is Philomel's delight; 
Her glory on thy head. 

As thou: most thoughtful pluckers of our muse 

Have blessed the dark with Music Sorrow taught. 
Mid Night of Ridicule did Brewing's fuse 

Urge to the hilt, his dripping pen, in Thought. 
In woof of Midnight caught, 

Did that blind prophet touch his epic chord. 
And by good Severn's lamp, Music's own child 

Melted our language, and its liquid poured 
For but one heart that smiled. 



Fickle is fancy: first to me thy role 

Was not unlike that Virgin, when her doom. 
Heard through the happy door, froze on her soul. 

Next, thou the robe of courage did'st assume, 
When through increasing gloom 

I heard thy song at dusk — Defeat's own hour. 
Fancy must play; did pierce thine ebon sphere 

Some soldier, broken parcel of lost power, 
I doubt not he would hear. 



Thee calling back to line the craven band 

That hushed their songs before the cuirassed dark. 
Like some more ardent lover of his land 

Who hails back fleeting soldiers ot their mark. 
Like thine his cry: hark! 

Like his thy note, so fraught with dull Despair: 
(Too full already is that gory bed.) 

And thou dost call as vainly through night air 
As he calls o 'er his dead. 



1 



Toniglit again I lie on that green isle — 

That magic isle amid the singing reed — 
And watch the hills lift up a rugged pile, 

Scarred oft with birch, whose silver leaf is freed 
Most early: blown the seed 

Of vagrant goldenrod across my brow. 
Where falling spindrift tames its restless wing, 

As life hath tamed my spirit, wherefore now 
To nature 's brow I cling. 

If we, like thee, dear gentle bird, could sing 

Away our sorrow in the dark, alone. 
How soon would every forest hallway ring 

With harmonies that breathed autumnal tone, 
And broken oft with moan. 

But we must face the multitude, and smile. 
Though Anguish leaneth on the heart's strained chords: 

And Longing crieth for some lone wood aisle, 
And all its peace affords. 

Thou wert a witness of the sweetest night 

That e'er lit Peri pathways for my feet: 
Nor was there ever melody that quite 

So nearly made a paradise complete. 
As thy song, wildly sweet. 

Sing on, tonight, dear Whip-poor-will, sing on; 
That hour returns, and all too swiftly goes 

To pave the path which I shall walk at dawn 
With dead leaves of the rose. 

Sing on; thy singing keeps the Vestal fires 

Of song ajflame, when all the hearths are cold; 
When Eobins leave their blossom scented lyres. 

And mutely wait within the shadow's fold 
Dawn riding aureoled. 

And each head dipped in feathers sleeps secure. 
Knowing the flame of song, through all the dark 

In thy sad throat burns bright and sweetly pure. 
And from its star hued spark. 

When morn comes quickly with her conquest tread. 

Shall each light up the ashes of her tune; 
Till flame shall leap to flame, and swiftly spread 

O'er the lost Kingdom of a Spectral Moon. 
Nor shall again thy rune 

Be heard till dies the sun's last level ray. 
And though I haunt the wood in noonday hours, 

Not in the grove, nor on the sunlit way 
Shall Music wake thy powers. 

A SONG OF BROTHERHOOD 

I, who slug this, am of no land: 
Tor though my heart is fondest of one land, 
Yet is this fondness truer because I love all lands. 
I hate the sin of mine own flesh and blood; 
And love the virtues of mine enemy. 
I am of England, only as England is of truth. 
I am of France only as France is virtuous. 
I am of Germany only as Germany is clean. ' ' 

I burned my last sad prejudice but yesterday: 
Now am I free to speak, being of no land. 
'Twas no pure fount of pride bade me prefer 
A bloated Saxon, heavy with his wine, 
To sad-faced Bedouins; fasting and at prayer. 

Brother of France, brother of Germany, brother of the American States, 
Brother of Italy, Eussia, Iceland and Japan, 
Comrade of the most unknown isle. 
If thou art true, then, art thou more to me 
Than one in mine own kingdom who is false. 
In war my sword would urge its gleaming thrust, 
With better play, through traitors at my side 
Than at true-hearted foes. 
I have seen dark-skinned men with great pathetic eyes, 



^^^^^ 



And have cheered coarse, dull white wretches who slew them. 

And in those days I called myself a patriot. 

Now am I patriot to the kind deeds of a Brahmin; 

To all that assists the ultimate ends of harmony 

In the wild songs of savages; to the good in everything. 

My flag is sewn by the fast shuttle of feet 

Wherever, and whenever good Samaritans tread the highway. 

My National Anthem is the Silence of Universal Peace, 

I love the sound of the breaking of bread, in India, 

Better, far better, than the sob of waves 

That kiss iron keels at Cowes. 

I am more of America than I am of Canada: 

I am more of the World than I am of America: 

I am more of the Universe than I am of the World. 

No creed have I nor know I any law that is evil. 

I am one of the hosts of Barbary; 

And even the clouds oppress my expansion of soul. 

If I were given three things to damn 

I would damn creed three times. 

If I were given three more things to damn 

I would damn creed three more times. 

For had a creed been damned in India's dawn 

The Ganges ne'er had known its human cry. 

And O, the blue eyed Irish, but for creed. 

Would lead the march of nations. You have asked: 

When will come Brotherhood? When will come the Christ f 

And I reply ; not until creeds are one 

With the vain dust of their own temples. 

The greatest teacher is he who comes both to learn and to teach._ 

Go Methodist, or Baptist, into Burma; say: 

' ' I come, my brown-skinned brother, to learn from thee 

All that thou hast of truth: I come to give 

All that I know of Good." 

Strange, when the garnishments are torn away, 

How like the Gods of other nations are 

Unto my God. 

I would build high a fire, 

Whose tongue would sear the silver on the stars; 

And for my fuel would gather scripts of creeds, 

Worm eaten altars, and the robes of priests, 

And treaty parchments brown, and pitiless swords, 

And all that militates against the Brotherhood. 

And to the warmth would I call Esquimaux, 

And Hottentots, and Englanders, and Arabs: 

And there, while eyes grew eloquent and tongues mute, 

I would assemble all the hosts of Barbary. 

Listen to me, O warring tribes of Earth; 

I am no longer of any land or of any creed. 

I am a patriot to the kind deeds of a Brahmin, 

To the good impulse of the lowest-scaled Pagan. 

So would 'st thou join me, comrade, test thy heart; 

And if those chambers harbor no malice; 

And if thou hast swept them clean of prejudice; 

And if thou art ready to slay a creed at God's command — 

Even a creed which thou lovest as Abraham loved Isaac — 

Then, the hosts of Barbary await thy company. 

Toronto, Dec. 18th, 1911. 



a 



1 



BARBARY 

"What is your creed?" cried the census man; 

And I answered: "I have none: 
I am one of the hosts of Barbary 

Who worship beneath the sun. 
We have temples aflame with flowers; 

And wearing the clouds their towers 



And the seven"days are the hymns of praise ,! 

4 



We sing to the Holy One. 

The creed hath need of a belfry bell 

To summon the knee to prayer. 
But we, of the Hosts of Barbary, 

Are called by the love we bear. 
O, we ride through the morning dews 

To gird on the Master's shoes. 
And we wait by night, while the stars burn white, 

The soul of His smile to share. 

Ten falsehoods nailed to a truth have ye; 

And a long cathedral aisle. 
And we, of the Hosts of Barbary, 

Stand out on the hills and smile. 
But we garner your truthful word 

And add it to one we heard, 
From a pagan band, somewhere in a land 

By the Ganges or the Nile. 

Ye feed your souls on a worn-out scroll, 

And chain them to chapel walls; 
Until they have never a thought of God 

Away from their pews and stalls. 
But we, whom your numbers despise, 

Are pastured on cloudless skies; 
For our souls have found that Holy Ground 

Is ever where Beauty calls. 

And ye are bound to a rule and law 

Upheld by a chant and charm. 
But we are fed from the veins of flowers 

That redden an upland's arm. 
O, in Barbary fair we grow 

A lily as white as snow; 
And a damask rose to welcome those 

Who fly from a creed 's alarm. 

So go to him who would know thy creed 

And say to him: 'None have I: 
1 have joined the Hosts of Barbary 

Who worship beneath the sky' 
For a day when the last creed's power 

Goes down with her temple 's tower, 
From a granite peak, shall the great God speak 

And Barbary 's hosts pass by. 

6 Dundonald St., Toronto, Oct. 6th, 1911. 



FRANCE 

My heart goes out to France, the Queen in ■(var, 
In carnival and love; the gay, the brave. 
To that young blue-eyed Breton who would save 
A dance for Death or for his Belle Aurore, 
Who keeps so purely in his heart the love 
Of love and honor while the tyrant guns 
Spume at his wisp of flesh their flaring tons, 
White hot from maddened ages gone before. 
The world's barometer is in that lad — 
That Breton peasant against whom is hurled 
The wild, down leaping chariot of Mars. 
When France is laughing all the Earth is glad 
And when she weeps the windows of the world 
Are darkened to the sun and to the stars. 

Vancouver, B. C, Jan 22nd, 1917. 



1 



A SONG TO THE SINGERS jj 

Should you descend the stairway of old Time, 

And search the webbed wine cellars of the years, 
The breaking of each vessel of sweet rhyme 

Will make most merry music for thine ears. ^j 

No time is dead that gave the world a song: ' 

The larger hours were wet with music's flagon; 
And half the garlands of the brave belong 

To runes that calmed the courage of the dragon. 

The clouds that flowed o'er robust Eome have found 

Another prop to lean on than her stone. 
But in the heart of music still abound 

Sweet traces of her tragic poet 's tone. 
And yonder tower, that crowds the ampler air 

Shall pass away before this rhyming story. 
Let those who build arise where eagles dare: 

I '11 mount, on this white page, to surer glory. 

What arrow ever pierced a traitor's crown 

That passed not first through some fair singer's heart? 
What courage on the ramparts of a town 

But fired its vigor with out chorie art? 
Tomorrow one shall ride the steel-lipped way. 

Or fold his arms when England's oak is sinking, 
Who wandered by the Muse 's rill today : 

And roused his valor, at my fountain, drinking. 

Vancouver, B. C, Dee. 23rd, 1913. 

WHIST— WHEE ! 

"Whlst-whee! " 

Little brown Dee ' ' 

Peers from her shelter 

Of bush and of tree. 

Her time she is biding 

To leap from her hiding 

And she says unto me : 

'■' Don 't look this way, big man, or they '11 see 

You are looking at me: 

Please, please look out at the sea; 

Whist-Whee ! ' ' 

And I walked up the sands 

And three little rebels took hold of my hands 

And they said : "Do you know 

Where a little brown maid, 

In a little brown plaid. 

Did go?" 

And I lied and said: "No," 

And they scampered away 

Like young squirrels at play; 

And looked all over and under the rocks 

For a glimpse of brown frocks. 

And I heard a quick cry 

From the shade of the tree 

Saying to me — 

Yes, saying to me: 

' ' You 're a dear, you 're a dear. ' ' 

And I said "Whist-whee; 

The rebels are all returning for thee." 

And she hugged to the tree. 

"Whist-whee" just two little words; 

But I heard them today in the song of the birds 

And the waters all sang as I walked by the sea: 

"Whist-whee, whist-whee" 

And I looked behind bush and I looked behind tree 

And the birds still were there and the busy song bee 

But little brown Dee 

With her solemn "Whist-whee," 

Spake not unto me. 



And over the hills I ■went, 

And a gentle mound 

I found; 

Lying like some fairy's lost pillow upon the ground 

And I knelt on my knee 

And wrote on the sand, 

With a sorrowing hand: 

"Little brown Dee 

Sleeps here by the sea: 

All ye who pass 

WhJst-whee!" 

San Francisco, California, Sept. 1st, 1914, 



PRELUDE 

Two jugs upon a table stood; 

One ample of girth and sweet of cavern. 

But a shapeless bit of homely wood 

That you would scorn in the poorest tavern; 

The other traced and interlaced 

By the strange fancy of a Dorian 

Was sloped and curved to a woman 's waist, 

And worthy the pen of a grim historian. 

Caneo came over a purple shoulder 

Where the vineyards crawl in the lazy sun; 

A bold man, Caneo; no bolder 

Ever a woman won. 

Bold was he as all men grow bold 

Who wash themselves long in the sun. 

And Caneo carried a cask of wine 

Where the grapes had flowed together. 

He suw the vase with the rich design 

And paused whether — 

(Ah, wonderful gate of whether) 

A wisp of juice would it hold, and he 

Had a cask of wine to pour. 

So, he filled the jug of homely wood, 

The ample of girth and sweet of cavern. 

And the journeymen found the wine was good 

As they pledged their luc^ at the nearest tavern. 

I am Caneo ; 

And my skin is brown from the comrade sun. 

And my heart is a cluster of grapes; each one 

Eipe and ready to flow together 

In the channel sweet of a purple song. 

And I stand at the wonderful gates of "whether," 

Lusty and true and strong; 

Whether the verse that the poets favored, 

Wrought with Dorian taste and skill. 

Or a basin of rock, by the sea flavored, 

Shall be the cup I fill. 

Here is the basin of rock, lean low, 

Drink of me for the wine hath a tang 

Not only of me but the sea. 

And thy lips shall give it a tang of thee. 

The years grow cold unto Poesy; haste, 

O haste; 

For the wine is strong as the drinker's taste. 



THE CRY OF THE SONG CHILDREN 

Say not I write to a metre's measure 

Who gather my words in flood. 

Say not I write for the lilting 's pleasure, 

For lo! my ink is blood. 

O, if these" lines could show my passion : 

Look is the blood not rich and red! 

I will pour it out till my soul is ashen 

And my grief lies dead. 

I am a fragment of restless wind 

Against the peak of a mountain broken. 

My heart is oft with the snow entwined 

And wears as a sweet token, 

Wherever I move, or ever I run, 

The sting of the frost and the kiss of the sun 

To show that I favor no pilgrim more 

Than the next who knocks at my cheerful door. 

As a woman athirst for an infant's cry 

Eocks her thin arms to the cooing air 

And croons a Lydian lullaby 

To soothe the child of her own despair 

So I go out on the hills at night 

And rock my arms with a sad delight. 

Rock them long 

Tor the children of song 

Which my barren page is athirst to bear. 

The souls of these unborn crowd me round 

And call to be clad 

In the mystical, glad 

Body of sound. 

I am coming, I cry, to release you all. 

The roses are red 

On the sea-brown wall; 

But the roses come and the roses fall; 

And the children call. 

And the children call ; 

But I am aseareh for bread. 

A wisp is here and a wisp is there; 

A long day's march, in the blinding dust, 

And 1 gain the form of a fleeting crust 

To lessen an hour's despair. 

And I cry to God: 

Shall my blood be shed 

And my years be trampled away in the sod 

For bread, for bread! 

O, softly I cry, nor chide my fate. 

But the rose hangs red 

Far over the beautiful garden gate, 

And the children wait. 

I am Caneo ; 

And my skin is brown from the comrade sun. 

And my heart is a cluster of grapes; each one 

Ripe and heady to flow together 

In the channel sweet of a purple song. 

And the unborn children around me throng. 

I will fill the air 

With their floating hair, 

I said. 

And I rose when the morn was a film of grey 

And moiled in a garden where love lay dead. 

And the children called and I answered "Yea, 

I come ; ' ' but the beckoning wisp of bread 

Called me away, away. 

And the children mourned as I lay in sleep; 

When the night was deep 

I could hear them weep. 



This is the poet's Hell; to know 

How rich a thing is his son's treasure; 

To stand at night in the wind flow, 

In a pure hour of leisure; 

To call his children and find 

His voice is a broken chord 

That is weary from calling all day in the wind: 

"This hour's bread, O Lord." _ 

Come little flaxen haired, 

Throat bared. 

Sun-brown imp who hath called me long; 

Here is your life in a song. 

Dance here on this page, and never 

To the last forever 

Need you to call again. 

I stole this hour to give you birth; the rain 

Let down your hair. 

The sky's 

Deepest dyes 

Tinctured your eyes. 

Dear little flaxen haired, 

Throat bared, wild. 

Sun-browned child 

Here is your life in a song undefiled. 

The morn is a film of lovely gray; 

And the rose is blown from a crimson thread; 

But I am over the hills, and away 

For Bread. 

Vancouver, B. C, Dec, 1916. 

A SONG TO CANADA 

My land is a woman who knows 

Not the child at her breast. 

At her quest 

Hath been gold. 

All her joys, all her woes 

With the thin yellow leaf are unrolled 

And here is my grief that no longer she cares 

For the tumult that crowds in a rune 

When the white curving throat of a cataract bares 

In a song to the high floating moon. 

I am Caneo, 

The poet she loves not, grown bold. 

Bold am I as all men grow bold 

Who wash themselves long in the sun: 

I know what she lost when she gathered the gold 

And she alone knows what she won. 

My land is a woman who loves 

All whose word is a lie; 

The limitless doves 

That coo in the hour when her peril is nigh; 

The poets who sing: 

"Very fair is the bride of the North 

As she now steppeth forth 

To enter that council which girdles the world with its ring.' 

But this is my grief that no longer she cares 

For the old wounding message of truth 

That sounds on the lips of a poet, who dares 

Look under the rouge of her youth. 

My land is a woman whose boast 

Is of iron and of stone. 

She hath thrown 

To the wind 

All that yielded her most. 

And tonight she must walk with the blind. 

And this is my grief that her gold and her gain 

Buys never a fragment of joy, 

A morsel of truth or of honor a grain, 

Or a love that is free from alloy. 



^ 



Hiss of hate or rain of applause, 

I shall sing my song in a freeman's cause. 

I have bathed in the spray 

On the long, sweet sands of Digby Bay. 

And from Labrador 

To Juan de Fuca, the torreador, 

Who tames the bull at our western door 

I have smoothed each rood of my country 's floor. 

Great is all God lay on our sod, 

The cricket's song or the Selkirk's reach; 

And small is all we have given to God; 

A heart of hate and a braggart's speech. 

A span of steel and a tier of stone; 

What boast to fling at His throne! 

We twist His trees and they plough His main: 

We sow His seed and we reap His grain; 

Our kingdom 's girth 

Is the poet's toast: 

But is it God or we should boast? 

My love for my land is as strong 

As the love of the sap for the tree; 

For she is the channel through which I upreached to the air. 

In the lilt of my song. 

A garland of sheltering leaves I wove her to wear 

And she gave not a hint of her love to the sheen 

Of their shimmering green, 

But fingered away at her gold: I despair, I despair; 

And yet comes a day she will hearken to me. 

I am Caneo, 

The poet she loves not, grown bold. 

Bold am I as all men grow bold 

Who wash themselves long in the sun : 

I know what she lost when she gathered the gold 

And she alone knows what she wore. 

Vancouver. B. 0., December, 1916. 

A SONG OF BETTER UNDERSTANDING 

I sing this song that you may know me better; 
Th^t I may know thee better; 
And that we two may burn our false idols 
At the same altar. 

I come to you, 

Young inland mariner on a sea of flowing grapes 

In purple Fiance. 

Shaking the sweet snow from my hardy shoulders 

I come to you. 

Long has my race, companioned by strong elements. 

Misunderstood the liquid nature of your soul 

As you, with the same blindness as mine own, 

Have called my silent Northmen cold and passionless. 

Let us approach one another, comrade; 

Look in mine eyes and I will look in thine: ; 

And that fair light which falls when soul meets soul 

Will be the first spark to arouse the fires 

Which shall consume our idols. 

Now I know thee better from that one long look, 

And no longer shall thy Latin temperament 

Be the subject of my ridicule. You, now, also know 

That I am not cold-hearted. I will kiss thee 

On both cheeks; and you shall shake hands with me. 

What folly kept us apart so long! 

Your people gave me to drink at the rare founts 

Of Moliere, Hugo and Gounod. 

My people renewed thy soul of art 

With the pure flow of Shakespeare, Wordsworth and Keats. 

A thousand pleasures of the heart and eye 

We owe each other. 

Upward reaching toward the same white light 

Have all our yearnings been. 



1 



Only our idols have blinded us through the long, sad years. 

Now the way is open : 

Consume fires ; flame fiercely ; for an idol does not burn readily, 

And this can never be a song of BetterUnderstanding 

Until all our false idols are translated into ashes. 

Yesterday I said : "I will go kill a German : 

I hate Germans; I hate their diet; I hate their aggressiveness. 

So I buckled on) my sword and sought out a Teuiton. 

And soon I found one sitting by the roadside. 

And his head was bent in, an attitude of profound thought. 

Then I said ' ' Mine enemy I have come to kill thee. ' ' 

And he answered quietly: "I will let you slay me 

If you will permit my body to fall on the floor of yonder chapel." 

So we journeyed to the chapel and entered its solitude; 

But as I prepared rr^y sword he quote unto me. 

In the rich accents of his thoughtful tongue, a song of Goethe. 

His Goethe? nay; my Goethe? nay; our Goethe? yea. 

And when I raised my sword I turned, savagely, and slew 

Not him, but one of mine idols — my false idols. 

Then from the chapel organ a soft sound crept with panther tread; 

And through the windows of song passed, like a great wind. 

All the pent-up passions of the ages. "The Appasionatta, " I cried: 

His Appasionatta? Nay. My Appasionatta? Nay. Our Appasionata? Yea. 

And I swung my sword more savagely" than before, and slew. 

Not him, but all of mine idols — my false idols. 

And when the last note had folded its head, like a tired child, 

In the arms of silence, leaving our hearts, like sea breaches, 

White and shining after the tempest has passed beyond, 

Mine enemy and I sang together the greatest song of man : 

The Song of Better Understanding. 

And when we parted I said : 

All white men are my brothers: I \vill| slay a white man no rrtore, 

Only are the black men mine enemies, and the yellow men, 

I will go and kill an African or a man of China. ' ' 

And soon I found a yellow man sitting by the roadside: 

And his head was bent in an attitude of profound thought. 

Then I said as before: "Mine enemy I have come to kill thee." 

And he answered quietly, ' ' I will let thee slay me 

If thou wilt let miy body fall on the soft sands of the sea-shore." 

"And why the sea-shore?" I said; and he replied unto me: 

"There is a star which I love better than all stars;' 

And if I fall upon the sands my last look will be upon that star." 

Then from his lips flowed the wisdom of Confucius. 

And my sword fell helpless and I said: 

' ' I loved thati star best of all stars in old England ; 

And I loved that truth of thy seer best of all truths: 

Let us sing together ' ' ; and we, lovers of the same star, 

Locked arms upon the rim of no-man 's sea, and sang 

"The Song of Better Understanding." 

What antagonism to America and her States 

Shall override our granite debt to Emerson, 

To Lowell, to Poe, to musical Lanier; 

To Whitman who blasphemed the god of Technique ; 

To Whittier whose life was a gentle song. 

What prejudice against Italian fury 

Is justified when we unbare the page 

Of Dante ; or when eye and soul regale 

In the majectic sweep of Michael Angelo! 

I sing this song that you might know me better; 
That I might know thee better. 
For now is the day at hand when we shall behold 
The dust of all our broken idols, om- false gods, 
Paving the streets where iusty mortals walk 
Chanting the hymns of Barbary and her hosts. 

O magnificent hosts! I can see them pass and repass, 
Singing, in diapason of a universal love, 
"The Song of Better Understanding." 

WILSON MacDONALD. 
Vancouver, December, 1913. 



, ,..:,^^^,.-^,-.^::,.,^' . ■;■;.,. 



TRAPPER ONE AND TRAPPER TWO 

Or the Ghost of TJngava, 
PART ONE. 
Moaning branches of the midnight, with your melancholy rune, 
With the mournful, mystic music of your cries; 
Wail of late November waters ; mocking laughter of the loon, 
That within the arms of desolation dies; 
Weave your glamour through my song: 
Haunt it at your doleful pleasure, 
Till the woodland 's wilding throng 
Dance upon my page a measure. 

Life and song are tired of leisure; let my rune be wild and strong. 
He was Trapper One — the dead man; I am Trapper Two who write 
Of the ghost that came to haunt me through the long Ungavan night. 

Moaning branches of the midnight! Have ye ever heard them moan 

In those wilds that God reserved to shame the soul; 

When you 've buried a companion and you 're in a world, alone, 

Where no echo from a living land can roll? 

In the winter's gothic light, 

When the sun's a dying ember 

And the only joy of night 

Is the pleasure you remember 

Prom a merry old December when a comrade 's eyes were bright, 

Have ye ever heard the hemlock, underneath the wristful sky. 

Chill the marrow bones of winter with the sadness of her cry? 

It is midnight in December as I write these niiystic lines: 

And the burning branch is etching spectral walls. 

In llie Gordian interlacing of its intricate designs 

Pleads u witchery of motion that enthralls. 

In this cabin 's haunt, alone. 

Sole companion of my sorrow. 

While the pines, in monotone. 

Wail to every wind a haro 

I am waiting for the morrow, all my courage overthrown; 

Fearful of the endless night and the gliding form in white 

That descends to chill my senses from a wild Ungavan height. 

Softer than an infant's breathing is the music of the pines; 

When they sing I know how Sound doth reverence God. 

O'er this life's abundant discord I can hear their mellow lines 

As their haipists pave, with broken strings, the sod. 

Yet the pine hath lost its power 

To renew my fainting spirit : 

I, who loved its sin^ng tower. 

Draw my cloak and madly fear it. 

I could rest but that I hear it wail her sorrow at this hour: 

Wail her sorrow, and his sorrow, as the pine alone can wail. 

In the depths of old Ungava, on the boldest trapper's trail. 

Search the symbols faintly crawling o 'er this yellow scroll of birch ; 

Ride the dipping, curving tremor of my pen. 

And the day you find me lifeless, in this cabin, gently search 

For a testament to prove my words to men. 

Should they challenge truth you'll find 

Foil to parry in a pocket. 

When you reach it, pray unwind 

Someone 's hair within a locket. 

Hold it to mine eyes grim socket : I shall see it, dead and blind. 

Would you grant a dead man bliss press it to my lips to kiss : 

Though I 'm dead I swear I '11 kiss it with a dead man 's sacred kiss. 

It was years ago, in Levis — from Quebec a river's cry — 

That two sons of Scotia loved a flower of France. 

And they wooed her in the autumn where the forts in ruin lie 

And the scarlet ranks of maple make advance. 

But the end of wooing came 

With the curving snow in billow; 

For a zephyr blew the flame 

From the roses on her pillow. 

And we laid her neath the willow and the gentle springtime came, 

Bringing back her thousand roses; but the fairest of them all, 

At the bugle cry of April,, never answered to the call. 



mimmmatmmmim 



But before the color faded from the petal of the rose, 

I, who loved her, knew how subtle was the thorn. 

When her favor chose the other all the joys of life arose 

And re-clad their forms in sable, most forlorn. 

For the maid with fingers fair, 

In a lover 's hour of leisure. 

Granted him a breadth of hair 

Which would mate a finger 's measure : 

Great enough/ to clasp has pleasure, big enough for my despair. 

Touch thy glass to mine, O comrade, who know sorrow such as mine: 

Legion of the hopeless lovers! drink with me this bitter wine. 

Northward came we in an autumn; Trapper One and Trapper Two, 

To a hut that tamed the wilderness with its spark. 

And we sentineled the valleys with as treacherous a crew 

As did ever clasp a velvet foot at dark. 

And we thinned the tribes of fur — 

Never touched by brand or tiver — 

In a land where not a stir 

Woke the slumber of the river 

Save the tamarack, ashiver, and the pheasant's startled whirr. 

But the wistful waves of sky saw my comrade's droop and die. 

And I closed his lips aquiver with the music of good-bye. 

This is all: I stole his treasure when I crudely formed his bed 

In a scraping, cruel, frozen bit of ground. 

And. although I ever loved him as the only link that led 

Back where music of her foot made sacred sound, 

Yet the love of her was more 

Than the solemn vow I carried. 

And though, ,at h,is bed, I swore 

The sweet locket should be buried 

All my good resolves miscarried: and I almost madly tore 

From his throat the silken compact; Life had given him her breath: 

Was I wrong to press my warm lips on the thing he claimed in death? 

I was happy with my comfort though I kept a dead man's right. 

(Could he care, asleep beneath the forest floor.) 

I would seek that Ancient City when the springtime 's b)iilmy light 

Fell on basking babies through the open door. 

But a night when clouds, aflush. 

Paled to pink, and amber after, 

Laughed a loon, across the hush, 

With her revenantic laughter ^ 

Rising wild and growing dafter as it wailed above the rush. 

And a warning in her message made me look across the night 

Where I saw the damning spirit in its gleaming robe of white. 

Moving like a light o ' lantern o 'er the bare cliff 's rugged face : 

(Walls of rock so sheer the snow could never cling) 

With a melancholy motion, that was spectral in its grace. 

Fled the sprite; if ghost you call a nameless thing. 

I had often hurled the boast, 

When I made the circle's number. 

That a spectre or a ghost 

Was a phantasy of slumber; 

Or a gentle myth to cumber timid children at the most. 

But my boastful lips grew silent and my heart did wildly thrill 

When I first beheld the phantom moving slowly up the hill. 

He had said a thing should haunt me if I broke his last request: 

But I always scorned his necromantic brain. 

Could a wdsp of hair and locket, stolen from a lifeless breast, 

Have the power to call a spirit back again. 

So, in ansger, I did cry: 

' ' 'Tis my fancy sees the spirit : 

To the ghostly ledge I'll fly: 

And, since folly bids me fear it, 

I will look not up till near it lest my resolution die." 

But anear thei crag I stumbled and the partridge rose in floek: 

And a silver elk — the vision — I beheld against the rock. 



s 



Soon my rifle soiled that silver with the crimson's piteous mark: 

And the phantom was a legend with its flash. 

And I washed the ruddy satin as, at eventide, the dark 

From the silvern cloud doth wash the scarlet splash. 

And I hung the fur on high; 

And grew festive o 'er the savor, 

As the flame, with eager cry, 

Freed the haunch 's garish flavor. 

Smack of wintergreen for favor: e'en the breezes passing by 

tarried through the night its fragrance: such a zest as might enthuse 

E'en the jaded lip of Gotham, lashed beneath the spice's ruse. 

Fool was I: no sprite pays homage to the lucent leap qI lead. 

'Twas a phantom and my brother had not lied. 

Not an evening since my feasting but the silver elk hath fled] 

Through the darkness with the mark upon its side. 

I have prayed a day 's respite 

But the breezes laugh in answer ; 

While the snow in wraith of white 

Whirls beside me like a dancer. 

And a pale and stately lancer rides to meet me through the night. 

Brief the season I can brave it for the hours are strange and cold; 

And my spirit feels the burden of a heart that's growing old. 

PAET TWO. 

Moaning branches of the midnight! . . . He hath passed beyond their dirge; 
Lying strangely on the foot-forgotten floor: 
For the Genius of Creation bade his infant soul emerge 
From the womb of Life and creep to Heaven 's door. 
Does it matter if the call 
Comes amidst the fires of Java; 
Or speaks weirdly through the hall 
Of the winter- washed Ungava? 

Liften from the creeping lava and the thunders that appal, 
I hrough the portal of Uranus, shades of Pompeii shall greet 
Spirits rising where the snowdrift wraps the pilgrim in its sheet. 

God creates and man interprets: 'tis interpretation fails 

When the moan of naked branches does not charm. 

Poor that lover, often praiseful of the glowing cheek, who hails 

Not the beauty of the curving snow of arm. 

Uller's wild and wintry shroud. 

Barren of the wile of tresses, 

With such beauty is endowed 

As shall win my soul 's caresses 

Quickly as the wine that presses through the richest summer cloud. 

Call me, then, Ilngava 's poet; for 1 love her bleak despair 

More than palms and more than roses which the tropic bosoms wear, 

Ungava, wild Ungava! if thy treasured crypt had tongue 

Half the world, ere this, had tracked the moose's spoor. 

Shouting wildly their eurekas where a lavish Hand had flung, 

Underneath the stammel rock, the yellow fure. 

Yet beneath the white star 's stare 

Thou art lying like a sleeper 

On her golden coils of hair; 

Ward of silence and the keeper 

Of a thousand men's despair; 

Who shall deeply delve, and deeper, while the midngiht bracons flare. 

Trappers here shall gadn their treasure on the hills that smoke and c4t>ojnj 

And the dreamer feast forever on the laughter of the loon. 

Moaning branches of the midnight, with your melancholy rune, 

With the mournful, mystic music of your cries, 

Sob of late November -w-aters, mocking laughter of the loon 

Or the bittern's doleful wailing ere it dies, 

Blow your music through the ear 

Of the one who courts these pages. 

Let him conjure up the drear 

From the storied depths of ages. 

And when drowsy o'er the sages bid imagination peer 

For a moment on the madness of a lonely trapper's brain, 

On the night he saw the vision with its guilty, crimson stain. 

Toronto, 1909. 



OTUS AND RISMEL 

{A lallad of the long sea lanes.) 

I'll sing of Love an hundred songs; 

For there 's an endless store. 
I'll sing of Love till the listening stars 

Shall crowd the ocean floor. 
And then I'll sing again of Love 

And then of Lovo once more. 

Here is the riddle ; here the key ; 

Uncoil the silken mesh. 
For Otus is a human soul 

And Eismel is the flesh. 
And tho my theme is the age's dream 

Its heart is young and fresh. 

Otus quaffed white flame of sun 

That gilded Gramard's noon. 
But Eismel breathed where the cold weed wreathed 

Eound Triton 's heavy shoon. 
Eismel dwelt on the lone sea veldt 

And wept for the round, red moon. 

It is a name that pours like wine: 

' ' Eismel, Eismel, Eismel. ' ' 
Whenever the word three times was heard, 

An answer — low and dismal — 
Moaned under the walls of sobbing halls, 
- In sea arcades abysmal. 

Eismel, now, by the light of moon, 

Doth Gramard 's beauties share. 
And Otus knows where the whitest rose 

Distils its fragrance rare. 
And Otus goes with the whitest rose 

And binds it in her hair. 

The sea-gull rests on Gramard's shore 

And mends her broken wing. 
And waters, dumb, from caverns come 

To Gramard 's cliffs, and sing. 
So ride with me to Gramard's sea, 

And all your dead loves bring. 

Yea, bring your dead loves in your arms. 

And I will kiss their brows. 
And they shall walk with thee at morn, 

And men their broken vows. 
And the merry breeze shall bid the seas 

Laugh over sunken prows. 

More graves than one each man shall dio-- 
(A sexton's trade we ply.) "' 

For every twilight spreads a grave 
Where some dead love doth lie — 

Some poor and pitiful dead love 
That buried does not die. 

Moving like shuttles over the deep 

Through broken masts and spars— 
The dolphins sew the rents of woe 

Where storm-gods smote the bars 
And the low brown tide that floods my song 

Unrolls a script of stars. 

Otus quaffs white flame of sun 

From flask of Gramard's noon 
But Eismel sits where the sunbeam knits 

Gold robes for Gramard's dune 
Nor shall she ever slip back to sea 

And weep for the round, red moon 



This is a tale of hidden things 

Which Love, alone, may find — 
A tale that sinks in the sad sea wave, 

And mounts in the soft night wind: 
A. tale that rides on the star-flecked tides 

That under the cliffs grow blind. 

The graceful green, in grenadine 

Danced well to Otus' flute. 
And where his reed flung winged seed 

Her furrows bore quick fruit; 
For countless fish thrust through the sea, 

Lilke silver grass in shoot. 

And one strange fish among the hosts 

Had large and human eyes. 
And every night it came and basked 

Beneath the velvet skies. 
And every night it stayed its flight 

Till Arcturus would rise. 

Love binds with silk; and then with hemp; 

And then with iron thong. 
And Otus grew to love those eyes 

And they to love his song. 
And every eve his flute would grieve 

Above the silver throng. 

The perfumed night called from the height 
That pierced her silver sails — 

"An hundred maids, with amorous braids. 
Dance now through Gramard's dales: 

Why waste thy song on a motley throng- 
In slimy finns and scales? 

I'll stem thy wounded flow of heart 
With wealth of woman's hair. 

I'll light thy soul with woman's eyes; 
And rid thee of despair." 

But Otus cried "My only joys 
Are those the fish may share. 

' ' And there 's a hand in Gramard 's land 

Tor every lonesome maid. 
And there are flowers in Gramard 's bowers 

For every soul dismayed. 
But never a flute, save mine, can liu'e 

The tribes of the deep sea shade." 

Love binds with silk; and then with hemp; 

And then with iron band. 
And then comes Fate and, soon or late, 

Unwinds each precious strand; 
And then the hours that promised flowers 

Bring only wastes of sand. 

One evening Otus missed the eyes 
That gazed with human fears: 

Nor did they come the next, nor yet 
Throughout the weary years. 

And so he wandered, desolate. 
Mid Gramard's dunes and meres. 

And then at last a troubled voice 

Assailed him in a dream — 
"And did'st thou love the finns and scales. 

Or what did human seem?" 
And Otus answered, "I did love 

A living soul, I deem." 



So' touched to pity by the look 

The tender minstrel bore. 
The spirit cried, ' ' The fish shall bide 

To-morrow at thy door; 
If thou but call from Gramard's wall, 

Rismel, three times, no more." 

From Gramard's cliff did Otus cry 

' ' Rismel, Rismel, Rismel. ' ' 
And after the word three times was heard, 

An answer, low and dismal. 
Moaned under the walls of sobbing halls. 

In sea arcades abysmal. 

And soon the mystic sea unrolled 

Her heaving portals wide: 
And near the shore, where oft of yore 

The fish was wont to bide, 
A mermaid, swaying a thousand stars. 

Lay pillowed on the tide. 

And then, as Otus roused his flute 

With lilt of ancient tunes, 
Her wistful eyes looked with surprise 

On Gramard 's furrowed dunes — 
To her their glow did seem to flow 

From old, familiar moons. 



"Art thou the fish?" and Rismel said 

' ' A mermaid was I born : 
And yet I knew the sky was blue. 

Ere Neptune's robe was torn: 
And yet I knew the sky was blue. 

And Gramard's dunes forlorn. 



"When in the songless caves I lay 

My soul yearned for a thing. 
And what it yearned I only learned 

An hour your flute did sjng — 
An hour your flute obeyed the mute. 

White fingers of her king." 

Then Otus played with madder art 

Than ever man did play; 
And drew from caverns of his heart 

An old and doleful lay; 
And lit the dole of its grieving soul 

On Dian 's tapered way. 

And Rismel rose from out the sea. 

As ships lift in the gale: 
So far she rose the gleaming sun 

Revealed the Ann and scale: 
Which seen, once more, the sea 's torn floor 

She pierced, with hopeless wail. 

Nine days and nights on Gramard 's shores 

Did Otus' spirit bleed. 
Nine days his woe did sadly flow 

ThirOugh caverns of his reed. 
Jim for nihe long days the secret sea 

Bore oilly the wayward weed. 

And then one night the silver light 

That flooded to the West, 
Unbared, upon the tearful wave. 

The mermaid's dead, cold breast: 
Like drifted snow her flesh did show 

Above the billows crest. 



Her hair did hold a stifling fold 

Of sea-wave in its lair. 
And wide her eyes were to the skies — 

Her life's last thought lay there — 
(It was a thought that she had caught 

Prom grottoss of despair." 

And Otus drew her to the sands, 

Ar.d made her last, cold bed. 
And the stars crept low in heaven, as though 

They honored, too, the dead. 
And the sun did surely weep all night; 

Por the lids of Dawn were red. 

Ill 

Por twenty years the lonesome meres 

Claimed Otus as their child. 
They heard each lay his flute did play 

When summer skies were mild: 
And they heard his cry when the leaden sky 

Eas^ed, like a thing defiled. 

Who watcheth long shall hear the song 

The glad home-comers sing. 
Who liveth well shall come to dwell 

In palace of the king. 
And what are fears that thread the years, 

To joys a day may bring. 

And well I know the ancient woe 

Shall come to me again: 
Yet it shall wear a gentler air, 

And grant me less of pain. 
But the joys I buried shall return 

In tenfold, like the grain. 

The vernal clover hath three tongues 

To drink the golden light. 
And rule of three binds land and sea, 

In Morning, Noon, and Night. 
And through the three of Trinity 

Doth God assert His might. 

And three great days to Otus came; 

As three come to us all — 
The day the wondrous fish arose 

To hear his flute's strange call; 
And the hour the mermaid left her bower 

Under the sad sea wall. 

And on the third, the greatest day, 

He walked on Gramard's hill: 
And while his thoughts were on that love 

The years could never kill, 
A laugh rode on the rippling air 

Like a spring-awakened rill. 
And Otus stilled his flute, and cried; 

' ' Rismel, Eismel, Rismel. ' ' 
And though the word three times was heard, 

No answer, low and dismal, 
Moaned under the walls of sobbing halls, 

In sea arcades abysmal. 

But at his side a maiden stood; 

And she was tall and fair: 
And she was crowned with crimson hood 

That partly hid her hair. 
And the deeps of seas were in her eyes; 

And Rismel 's soul lay there. 



Who watcheth long shall hear the song 

The glad home-comers sing. 
Who liveth well shall come to dwell 

In paace of the king. 
And what are all the woes of Time 

To joys a day may bring. 

The years bridge chasms deep and wide; 

They bridge them span by span. 
And bolt, and thong, and tier are strong; 

And true the Builder's plan. 
And where the long, white arches end, 

Stands Christ, the Son of Man. 
IV 
Rismel is mermaid now no more; ' 

And the sea forsakes my tale. 
And so I tell of the chiming bell, 

And the mists of wedding veil: 
And of children sweet, who bathe their feet 

Where the blossoms drift the dale. 

This is a tale of hidden things, 

Which Love, alone, can find — 
A tale that sinks in the sad sea wave, 

And mounts in the soft night wind ; 
A tale that rides on the star-flecked tides, 

That, under the cliffs, grow blind. 

Who reads this tale and still doth mourn 

For suns gone down the West, 
Is as a woman who doth press 1 

A dead babe to her breast. 
While at her gate the living wait, 

And weep to be caressed. 

More graves than one each man shall dig; 

' ' A sexton 's trade we ply. ' ' 
For every twilight spreads a grave 

Where some dead love doth lie — 
Some poor and pitiful dead love 

That, buried, does not die. 

And only shall these loves awake 

When Thanatos rides by. 
So bid the mourners all disperse; 

And dry thine own sad eye: 
For the wisp of clay that rides away 

Is scarcely worth a sigh. 

There was a stir lige gossamer, 

When Rismel slipt to sea. 
And with a stir like gossamer 

The deeps shall welcome me: 
But at Gramard's gates the Bridegroom waits* 

And His words shall make me free. 

6 Dundonald St. Toronto, Canada. ,Jan 12th, 1912, 



THE ROSE AND THE WILDFLOWER 

Have ye ever picked berries, O ye Englander, in a wild Muskoka lair 

At an hour when the dew hath blushes from the dawn 's first rosy stare. 

Have ye ever heard that ancient cry of "Let there be light, bQ light" 

Sound over an unknown kingdom, at the crimson end of night! 

If ye never have let your critic pen touch not the verse I bear: 

Tor the crags of Rosseau shall not smoothe to whim your London air. 

I have quaffed health with the berryman as the dawn washed up the sun. 

And the wine I drew was rare, I knew, else why had the cob-web spun. 

Bed, robust wine, in a cluster held — so red that it ssemed the dew 

Had captured the crimson kiss of morn, and thrilled with it through and through. 

Havej ye ever torn, O critic man, your soft white hands on a thorn !^ 

Then you'll tear them if you touch these lines that deep in the wilds were born. 

I am of the rock 's strong vigor : I am of the leaf 's unrest : 

I am the liege of the silent towers; and I am the royal guest. 

I have dreamed my rights in a droning hall where a star leaned on a tree, 

In a land where a new desire hath taught old Freedom to be free. 

And if the sting of your critic's tongue shall leap at the song\ I bring 

I doubt if the waves of Eosseau shall thereupon cease to sing. 

We never shall culture a wreath of roses to ^ie with your England's own. 

We never shall match our cedarn lace with the curtains about your throne. 

But the flow-ers we nurse on our Northern crags shall lean on thei world's white 

breast 
With grace as rare as the whitest rose that ever a lip hath passed. 
In our shadown halls the white throat calls;' and if you dislike his rote. 
Think you that he'll fly over Surrey and study the skylark's note? 

The reverend word is on our lips, and we thrill at your England's Keats. 

We haven 't a man in all our land to sit in your Mighty 's seats. 

But there isn 't a man in all your land can swing on the giant limb 

Held by the pine to nurse the line which the Northern bards shall hymn. 

There 's an even flow of omnibus that tides down your Regent Street ; 

But you cannot train our Northern streams to run with its conquered feet. 

I am a lover of things unloved : for the virgin kiss I yearn. 
And my lady fair is an unwooed lair that pillows my head with fern. 
The mosses wait all day for my touch, and the crags yearn for my cry, 
To give release to the prisoned sounds that deep in their caverns lie. 
And the granite elifi's within my song shall answer the mocking hue 
Of every don of the vasselled verse who sneers at my rugged crew. 

Out of the North came battlemen who harried the Southern 's rest. 

And out of the North will come great bards — in their savage garments dressed. 

For who stands face to the white winged storm hath a different tale to tell 

Than he who sits in a tent of thyme and lists to the vesper bell. 

I 've brought you a wreath of wild flowers and if your fair London whines 

I '11 sit on the rocks of Rosseau, and chant to a sea of pines. 

Have ye ever troubled the stars, O Englander, that lie in a blue lake's sleep, 

With a blade whose touch is a woman 's lip, whose power is a panther 's leap ! 

Have ye ever stood at the end of things, and the edge of the things to be. 

In a land where a new desire hath taught old freedom to be free? 

If ye never have, read on, read on; for I to the North belong. 

And the stars that glow in Rosseau 's deeps are shining throughout my song, 

Wilson MacDonald. 
Claresholm, Alta., April 19th, 1913. 






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